Monday, April 4, 2016

To Michael B. Katz, In Memoriam (Tani, States of Dependency, Post 1)

Back in 2010, when I was a lowly
graduate student trying to figure out what I had to contribute, I closed
my guest blogging stint here at LHB with a post on gratitude. As
I begin a series of posts on my just-published book, I’d like to begin the same way. I have by now accumulated
many debts – so many that my formal Acknowledgments section is surely
inadequate and under-inclusive.

But I will always remember this
big one: the debt I owe to one of dissertation advisors, Michael B. Katz.
He succumbed to cancer in August, 2014, after a long career at the
University of Pennsylvania. By then he had taught hundreds of students
and written dozens of important books and articles, ranging from
landmark overviews of the American welfare state to moving meditations
on urban transformation and place-based inequality. (Here he is talking
about One Nation Divisible; here's a link to a must-read short piece, "The Death of 'Shorty.'") My highest aspiration for
my book is that it would have made him proud. So, before I post anything
more about that, I want you to know about Michael Katz,
to whom the book is dedicated.

I should mention first the
beautiful and inspiring tributes to Michael that others have written.
Mike Rosewrote about the extraordinary feedback that Michael gave to
colleagues and students. “He was tough-minded and didn’t hold back,
though he provided the hard news in a way that made your writing better.
And when you got praise—and he was generous with praise—well, you could
take it to the bank, for Michael was not a bullshitter.” Tom
Sugrue, Michael's longtime colleague and collaborator, wrote admiringly about
Michael’s “fierce intellect, his perseverance, [and] his generosity.” He
also described Michael’s “commitment, against the odds, to make the
world a just place.” Over
at the U.S. Intellectual History Blog, Robert Greene II pinpointed
perhaps the most tragic aspect of Michael’s untimely passing: that “we
won’t have the opportunity to hear even more from him in such a critical
time in our nation’s history.”In
the fall of 2014, at a conference organized in his honor at the
University of Pennsylvania, I heard many more tributes – from Alice
O’Connor, Ira Katznelson, William Julius Wilson, and others.
They praised Michael’s work for its combination of rigor and passion –
for drawing on deep archival research to confront pressing contemporary
questions. At a memorial service the following day, I heard family and
close friends describe Michael’s humane approach to life. Michael could
be a harsh judge when writing about past actors, but in his day-to-day
dealings, he was kind, generous, and empathetic.

All of this is true to my experience. All of these qualities inspire my deep and abiding gratitude to him. I
am most thankful, though, for a different quality: Michael inspired his
students to be courageous with their knowledge – to recognize the value
of their own research and ideas, and to put it out in the world.

Here’s
an example of what I mean: I remember that in graduate seminars,
Michael would often ask hard questions, hear silence, and then just wait
… and wait … for as long as it took. That awkward pause that everyone
else seems to find unbearable – Michael endured it calmly and patiently,
refusing to fill the space with his own formidable knowledge.
Eventually, a student would speak up. Sometimes that student was me.

Moments
like that helped transform me from someone who often felt like a
grad-school impostor to someone capable of writing a dissertation,
teaching a class, and speaking articulately about my own values and
commitments. I’m sure that Michael knew what he was doing when he let
those silences stretch on and on. He wasn’t trying to make us
uncomfortable. He was giving us permission to step up and become the
scholars and experts he knew we could be.

Michael was like that
at every stage of graduate school, perhaps most of all in those
difficult “all but dissertation“ (ABD) years, when students tend to feel
lost, discouraged, and unconfident. I remember many a conversation in
which, in the course of seemingly idle chit-chat, he would tell me about
what his recent former graduate students were doing. He was always so
proud – not of their titles or positions, but of their research agendas.
He thought they were asking great questions, about issues that mattered: poverty, inequality, education, immigration, urban governance. And he
was so excited by their findings. (“Tremendously important” is a phrase
he used a lot.) I left our conversations feeling that even if I didn’t
have it all figured out, I was spending my time on something worthwhile.

One final point about Michael: He had a wonderful
laugh—heaving, mirthful, quintessentially nerdy. Anyone who knows him
will recall it. Sometime he laughed at irony. (I’m sure he would have
found humor in our current presidential election.) But there was nothing
despondent or dark about his worldview. I want to end with this warm
memory because Michael’s own writing tended to end this way – not
necessarily happily, but with the sense that it was possible to learn
from history and do better in the future. I thought about this last
year, when a reader of an early draft of my book manuscript told me that
the book left her with a bleak feeling. I immediately began revising my
Conclusion. In truth, I find it hard to write about the history of
public welfare in a way that suggests optimism about the future. But I
felt that I owed it Michael to try, and I hope that I succeeded.

So
– here’s to Michael B. Katz, a brilliant scholar, an extraordinary
teacher and mentor, a loving husband to Edda and father to Sarah, Paul, and Rebecca, and a wonderful human being. May his memory continue
to inspire us to do good work and to be decent people.

Thank you for taking the time to read this post and for giving me a chance to honor his memory.

[This
is the first in a series of posts about States of Dependency, a history
of social welfare law and administration between the New Deal and the
modern welfare rights movement]